Posts Tagged ‘weird news’

A young black bear was spotted several times in Attleboro last weekend, causing a scene when it clung to a tree in a residential area Sunday evening for about two hours.

The bear was in a tree behind a home on Lamb Street, onlookers said, where several police officers and a Capron Park Zoo official tried to control the animal as neighbors gathered to watch.

“There were easily over 100 people on the street, maybe 50 to 75 feet away from the bear,” said Bill Jones, who owns the house next door. “That in itself was very scary to me and my wife because” there were very young children in the crowd.

Around 9:30 p.m., Massachusetts Environmental Police were called to the area, spokesman Reginald Zimmerman said yesterday. The environmental police officers ordered the crowd to back away and had local police turn off their lights – and the bear left soon after through Jones’s yard.

“No more than five minutes after that happened, we could hear branches cracking and we could see the shadow of the bear coming down the tree,” Jones said. The bear then climbed over Jones’s fence and ran across the street into a wooded area.

The bear had been spotted several times over the weekend, Zimmerman said, but did not cause any problems. The appearance follows a string of black bear sightings over the past month in areas including Wayland, Framingham, and Weston, but this is not unusual, he said.

“Basically, what happens is around this time [of year] moms kick [the cubs] out of the dens, and they go out in search for food and wander until they can find their own territory,” Zimmerman said.

Plainville seventh-grader Karthik Karnik competed in the final round of the National Geographic Bee today against nine other geography whizzes from across the country.

While he didn’t finish in the top three, Karnik, 13, was among the seven other finalists who won $500 in the contest, which was held in Washington, D.C., and moderated by “Jeopardy” host Alex Trebek.

The top three won college scholarships of $25,000, $15,000, and $10,000. The top finisher was Tine Valencic, 13, of Texas, who will also get a lifetime subscription to National Geographic magazine and a trip to the Galapagos Islands.

Karnik had won the title of 2011 Massachusetts National Geographic Bee Champion earlier this year.

The contest is scheduled to air over four nights beginning June 13 at 6:30 p.m. on the National Geographic Channel, the company said in a statement.

Chris Sargent has been a professional candlepin bowler for 20 years, and his average score hovers around 125 points.

But on one string Friday night, the Haverhill resident nearly doubled his average score, and his 245 tied the world record for a single-string score.

“If you hit over 200 in candlepin, that’s really big,” said Sargent, a Groveland police officer,who was playing at Metro Bowl in Peabody.

Said teammate Joe Tavernese: “That string Friday night was unbelievable. I was just in awe. To watch something like that was unbelievable.”

Candlepin, a New England tradition, uses smaller pins and smaller balls than traditional bowling, making the game lower-scoring and more difficult. Further complicating the game, once pins are knocked down they are not cleared away.

Sargent is part of the Friday Night Pro League. When he tied the record, it was the second-to-last week of the season. His team is in first place, but the second-place team was only a few points behind for the entire season, so it was a big night.

His high-scoring string came when his team was down 52 points after two games, said Tavernese. Sargent started the round with a spare and went on to throw six consecutive strikes.

“He throws strikes together like no one I’ve never known,” said Tavernese, who has been the manager of Metro Bowl for 42 years.

People began to gather around the lane as his score kept growing, Tavernese said, and at the end of the game everyone was in awe.

His score ties that of Ralph Semb, president of the International Candlepin Bowling Association.

It is the second candlepin bowling world record set by Sargent, who holds the highest score for three strings in a five-game match, 530 points.

Five Barnstable High students sustained minor injuries when a rogue wave struck their whale watch tour boat yesterday, officials said.

At 10:23 a.m., about an hour into the students’ tour, the Coast Guard received a notification from the Barnstable-based vessel Whale Watcher that a wave between 5 and 7 feet had hit the boat, according to Petty Officer Connie Terrell, a Coast Guard spokeswoman.

The injured students were taken to Cape Cod Hospital, Terrell said. Patrick Clark, the Barnstable High School principal, said two of the students were released from the hospital yesterday afternoon, and that the rest were expected to go home some time yesterday.

The episode began when the boat was about 5 miles away from Race Point in Provincetown, and the captain noticed a wave much larger than the rest heading toward the vessel, said Jack Hill, managing partner of Hyannis Whale Watcher Cruises.

The captain told the 47 students on board to hang on or go inside, but 15 to 20 were still on the bow when the wave hit, Hill said.

“This wave was a surprise, and caught everybody by surprise, but those hanging on were fine,” he said.

The five injured students sustained minor injuries, with one student injuring her knee and another requiring stitches on her chin or lip, Clark said.

“All things being equal, I think we’re kind of counting our blessings that these injuries, while difficult for the kids and their families, aren’t anything life threatening,” he said.

The tour was part of the students’ marine biology and ecology class.

Provincetown authorities were alerted at 10:36 a.m. and met the 106-foot boat when it arrived at MacMillan Pier, taking the injured students to the hospital. Coast Guard officials boarded the boat, where they interviewed the captain and crew, and traveled back with the remaining students to Barnstable.

Since Whale Watcher began about 30 years ago, Hill said this was the most severe accident that has occurred on a boat.

“I knock on wood when I say this, but this is the first time we’ve had more than one person hurt at one particular time,” he said. “In the past, there has been an elderly person that might fall or something like that, but the incidents are isolated, and there haven’t been that many either. We try to be vigilant and keep our passengers safe.”

The Coast Guard reported the seas at about 6 feet, and winds ranged from 31 to 35 miles per hour. Several other whale watch companies canceled some or all of their tours yesterday.

The remains were found in a woman’s brown shoe on the riverbanks off of River Road in West Newbury, where workers were removing sewage treatment disks that had floated into the area from a New Hampshire treatment plant.